(Editor’s note: Colin Flaherty has done more reporting than any other journalist on what appears to be a nationwide trend of skyrocketing black-on-white crime, violence and abuse. WND features these reports to counterbalance the virtual blackout by the rest of the media due to their concerns that reporting such incidents would be inflammatory or even racist. WND considers it racist not to report racial abuse solely because of the skin color of the perpetrators or victims.)

EDITOR’S NOTE: The links in the following report may contain offensive language.

NBC Sports had it half right: When he is on the football field, Lafayette Pitts is one of the most dangerous men in America.

Rules of the Knockout Game are pretty simple: Find a white guy. Make sure he looks defenseless. Punch him in the face. If he doesn’t get up, you win. And that is what three witnesses said the Pitt players did just a few weeks ago.

Last Friday, it was revealed they were charged with assault and conspiracy. Their court date is set for January. But that did not stop them from suiting up the next day for a big game against Notre Dame.

During the match, NBC Sports mentioned the crimes only once, albeit briefly. They called it a “confrontation.”

To Karl Olsheski, it seemed more like an assault. Olsheski and two women were walking near the Pitt campus when a mob of black people crossed the street to block their way.

It was a Saturday night, early Sunday morning really, and the Pitt Panthers had just returned to Pittsburgh after a 20-6 victory over the Buffalo Bulls.

Star running back Ray Graham allegedly made the first move. He stepped in front of Olsheski and asked “Wassup?” Graham did not know Olsheski, but Olsheski knew him. Lots of people do: He’s a big man at Pitt. The fourth most prolific running back in Pitt history.

During the big game he broke off several long runs, picking up 172 yards on the ground. He also caught six passes.

After stopping Olsheski, Graham called him what the police are referring to as a “racial epithet.” Which in other times and other places would take this crime to a new level: A hate crime. But not here. Not now. Not before the big game.

Olsheski and the two women tried to keep moving, but Graham got in their way again. That is when star wide receiver Devin Street – one of the “most dangerous punt returners in America,” according to the announcers at the big game – punched Olsheski in the head.

Unlike two other recent examples of the Knockout Game in Pittsburgh, no one died. No one went to the hospital.

Soon everyone was on their way. Game over. Just another anonymous assault that more often than not goes unreported because more people are less willing to believe police will do anything about it.

Instead, police “charged” them with misdemeanor assault and conspiracy. The players received their summonses in the mail.

University officials said they were not going to “rush to judgment” and suspend the players.

After fans learned the three would be available for the contest, among the few who paid any attention at all, their reaction ranged from indifference to resignation. One student said that anyone who thought they were guilty was a closed-minded bigot.

At least one viewer was surprised she did not hear more about the alleged assault.

3 Responses to Black Pack Attack in Pittsburg

University is supposed to be for the most civilised and educated in our societies not animals.
Things like this wind me up, I’d dream about ruining football careers for months after something like this happened.

Off topic, that little clip of the blacks slapping the white girl, do you know anything about what happened. Fucking animals.

"Perhaps the oddest thing about the experts and police chiefs and reporters and editors and tenured professors who constantly tell us that these black-on-white atrocities aren’t racially motivated, is that blacks don’t believe that for a second. They know that they are racially motivated, they say so, and they celebrate them for it."
- Nicholas Stix